8,165 research outputs found
Are there S=-2 Pentaquarks?
Recent evidence for pentaquark baryons in the channels ,
and their anti-particles claimed by the NA49 collaboration is
critically confronted with the vast amount of existing data on
spectroscopy which was accumulated over the past decades. It is shown that the
claim is at least partially inconsistent with these data. In addition two
further exotic channels of the pentaquark type available in the NA49 data are
investigated. It is argued that this study leads to internal inconsistency with
the purported signals
Long-range behavior of the optical potential for the elastic scattering of charged composite particles
The asymptotic behavior of the optical potential, describing elastic
scattering of a charged particle off a bound state of two charged, or
one charged and one neutral, particles at small momentum transfer
or equivalently at large intercluster distance
, is investigated within the framework of the exact three-body
theory. For the three-charged-particle Green function that occurs in the exact
expression for the optical potential, a recently derived expression, which is
appropriate for the asymptotic region under consideration, is used. We find
that for arbitrary values of the energy parameter the non-static part of the
optical potential behaves for as
. From this we derive for the
Fourier transform of its on-shell restriction for the behavior , i.e.,
dipole or quadrupole terms do not occur in the coordinate-space asymptotics.
This result corroborates the standard one, which is obtained by perturbative
methods. The general, energy-dependent expression for the dynamic
polarisability is derived; on the energy shell it reduces to the
conventional polarisability which is independent of the energy. We
emphasize that the present derivation is {\em non-perturbative}, i.e., it does
not make use of adiabatic or similar approximations, and is valid for energies
{\em below as well as above the three-body dissociation threshold}.Comment: 35 pages, no figures, revte
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Minimum Cell Connection in Line Segment Arrangements
We study the complexity of the following cell connection problems in segment arrangements. Given a set of straight-line segments in the plane and two points a and b in different cells of the induced arrangement:
[(i)] compute the minimum number of segments one needs to remove so that there is a path connecting a to b that does not intersect any of the remaining segments; [(ii)] compute the minimum number of segments one needs to remove so that the arrangement induced by the remaining segments has a single cell.
We show that problems (i) and (ii) are NP-hard and discuss some special, tractable cases. Most notably, we provide a near-linear-time algorithm for a variant of problem (i) where the path connecting a
to b must stay inside a given polygon P with a constant number of holes, the segments are contained in P, and the endpoints of the segments are on the boundary of P. The approach for this latter result uses homotopy of paths to group the segments into clusters with the property that either all segments in a cluster or none participate in an optimal solution
Proton-Deuteron Elastic Scattering from 2.5 to 22.5 MeV
We present the results of a calculation of differential cross sections and
polarization observables for proton-deuteron elastic scattering, for proton
laboratory energies from 2.5 to 22.5 MeV. The Paris potential parametrisation
of the nuclear force is used. As solution method for the charged-composite
particle equations the 'screening and renormalisation approach' is adopted
which allows to correctly take into account the Coulomb repulsion between the
two protons. Comparison is made with the precise experimental data of Sagara et
al. [Phys. Rev. C 50, 576 (1994)] and of Sperison et al. [Nucl. Phys. A422, 81
(1984)].Comment: 24 pages, 8 eps figures, uses REVTe
Computing the Similarity Between Moving Curves
In this paper we study similarity measures for moving curves which can, for
example, model changing coastlines or retreating glacier termini. Points on a
moving curve have two parameters, namely the position along the curve as well
as time. We therefore focus on similarity measures for surfaces, specifically
the Fr\'echet distance between surfaces. While the Fr\'echet distance between
surfaces is not even known to be computable, we show for variants arising in
the context of moving curves that they are polynomial-time solvable or
NP-complete depending on the restrictions imposed on how the moving curves are
matched. We achieve the polynomial-time solutions by a novel approach for
computing a surface in the so-called free-space diagram based on max-flow
min-cut duality
Mode Fluctuation Distribution for Spectra of Superconducting Microwave Billiards
High resolution eigenvalue spectra of several two- and three-dimensional
superconducting microwave cavities have been measured in the frequency range
below 20 GHz and analyzed using a statistical measure which is given by the
distribution of the normalized mode fluctuations. For chaotic systems the limit
distribution is conjectured to show a universal Gaussian, whereas integrable
systems should exhibit a non-Gaussian limit distribution. For the investigated
Bunimovich stadium and the 3D-Sinai billiard we find that the distribution is
in good agreement with this prediction. We study members of the family of
limacon billiards, having mixed dynamics. It turns out that in this case the
number of approximately 1000 eigenvalues for each billiard does not allow to
observe significant deviations from a Gaussian, whereas an also measured
circular billiard with regular dynamics shows the expected difference from a
Gaussian.Comment: 7 pages, RevTex, 5 postscript figure, to be published in Phys. Rev.
E. In case of any problems contact A. Baecker ([email protected]) or H.
Rehfeld ([email protected]
R-matrix theory of driven electromagnetic cavities
Resonances of cylindrical symmetric microwave cavities are analyzed in
R-matrix theory which transforms the input channel conditions to the output
channels. Single and interfering double resonances are studied and compared
with experimental results, obtained with superconducting microwave cavities.
Because of the equivalence of the two-dimensional Helmholtz and the stationary
Schroedinger equations, the results present insight into the resonance
structure of regular and chaotic quantum billiards.Comment: Revtex 4.
A parabolic free boundary problem with Bernoulli type condition on the free boundary
Consider the parabolic free boundary problem For a
realistic class of solutions, containing for example {\em all} limits of the
singular perturbation problem we prove that one-sided
flatness of the free boundary implies regularity.
In particular, we show that the topological free boundary
can be decomposed into an {\em open} regular set (relative to
) which is locally a surface with H\"older-continuous space
normal, and a closed singular set.
Our result extends the main theorem in the paper by H.W. Alt-L.A. Caffarelli
(1981) to more general solutions as well as the time-dependent case. Our proof
uses methods developed in H.W. Alt-L.A. Caffarelli (1981), however we replace
the core of that paper, which relies on non-positive mean curvature at singular
points, by an argument based on scaling discrepancies, which promises to be
applicable to more general free boundary or free discontinuity problems
Three charged particles in the continuum. Astrophysical examples
We suggest a new adiabatic approach for description of three charged
particles in the continuum. This approach is based on the Coulomb-Fourier
transformation (CFT) of three body Hamiltonian, which allows to develop a
scheme, alternative to Born-Oppenheimer one.
The approach appears as an expansion of the kernels of corresponding integral
transformations in terms of small mass-ratio parameter. To be specific, the
results are presented for the system in the continuum. The wave function
of a such system is compared with that one which is used for estimation of the
rate for triple reaction which take place as a step of
-cycle in the center of the Sun. The problem of microscopic screening for
this particular reaction is discussed
Experimental vs. Numerical Eigenvalues of a Bunimovich Stadium Billiard -- A Comparison
We compare the statistical properties of eigenvalue sequences for a gamma=1
Bunimovich stadium billiard. The eigenvalues have been obtained by two ways:
one set results from a measurement of the eigenfrequencies of a superconducting
microwave resonator (real system) and the other set is calculated numerically
(ideal system). The influence of the mechanical imperfections of the real
system in the analysis of the spectral fluctuations and in the length spectra
compared to the exact data of the ideal system are shown. We also discuss the
influence of a family of marginally stable orbits, the bouncing ball orbits, in
two microwave stadium billiards with different geometrical dimensions.Comment: RevTex, 8 pages, 8 figures (postscript), to be published in Phys.
Rev.
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